34,130 research outputs found
Myocardial Architecture and Patient Variability in Clinical Patterns of Atrial Fibrillation
Atrial fibrillation (AF) increases the risk of stroke by a factor of four to
five and is the most common abnormal heart rhythm. The progression of AF with
age, from short self-terminating episodes to persistence, varies between
individuals and is poorly understood. An inability to understand and predict
variation in AF progression has resulted in less patient-specific therapy.
Likewise, it has been a challenge to relate the microstructural features of
heart muscle tissue (myocardial architecture) with the emergent temporal
clinical patterns of AF. We use a simple model of activation wavefront
propagation on an anisotropic structure, mimicking heart muscle tissue, to show
how variation in AF behaviour arises naturally from microstructural differences
between individuals. We show that the stochastic nature of progressive
transversal uncoupling of muscle strands (e.g., due to fibrosis or gap
junctional remodelling), as occurs with age, results in variability in AF
episode onset time, frequency, duration, burden and progression between
individuals. This is consistent with clinical observations. The uncoupling of
muscle strands can cause critical architectural patterns in the myocardium.
These critical patterns anchor micro-re-entrant wavefronts and thereby trigger
AF. It is the number of local critical patterns of uncoupling as opposed to
global uncoupling that determines AF progression. This insight may eventually
lead to patient specific therapy when it becomes possible to observe the
cellular structure of a patient's heart.Comment: 5 pages, 4 figures. For supplementary materials please contact Kishan
A. Manani at [email protected]
Perturbations of C*-algebraic invariants
Kadison and Kastler introduced a metric on the set of all C*-algebras on a fixed Hilbert space. In this paper structural properties of C*-algebras which are close in this metric are examined. Our main result is that the property of having a positive answer to Kadisonâs similarity problem transfers to close C*-algebras. In establishing this result we answer questions about closeness of commutants and tensor products when one algebra satisfies the similarity property. We also examine K-theory and traces of close C*-algebras, showing that sufficiently close algebras have isomorphic Elliott invariants when one algebra has the similarity property
The Devil is in the Detail: Hints for Practical Optimisation
Finding the minimum of an objective function, such as a least squares or negative log-likelihood function, with respect to the unknown model parameters is a problem often encountered in econometrics. Consequently, students of econometrics and applied econometricians are usually well-grounded in the broad differences between the numerical procedures employed to solve these problems. Often, however, relatively little time is given to understanding the practical subtleties of implementing these schemes when faced with illbehaved problems. This paper addresses some of the details involved in practical optimisation, such as dealing with constraints on the parameters, specifying starting values, termination criteria and analytical gradients, and illustrates some of the general ideas with several instructive examples.gradient algorithms, unconstrained optimisation, generalised method of moments.
Transitions in non-conserving models of Self-Organized Criticality
We investigate a random--neighbours version of the two dimensional
non-conserving earthquake model of Olami, Feder and Christensen [Phys. Rev.
Lett. {\bf 68}, 1244 (1992)]. We show both analytically and numerically that
criticality can be expected even in the presence of dissipation. As the
critical level of conservation, , is approached, the cut--off of the
avalanche size distribution scales as . The
transition from non-SOC to SOC behaviour is controlled by the average branching
ratio of an avalanche, which can thus be regarded as an order
parameter of the system. The relevance of the results are discussed in
connection to the nearest-neighbours OFC model (in particular we analyse the
relevance of synchronization in the latter).Comment: 8 pages in latex format; 5 figures available upon reques
Classification of String-like Solutions in Dilaton Gravity
The static string-like solutions of the Abelian Higgs model coupled to
dilaton gravity are analyzed and compared to the non-dilatonic case. Except for
a special coupling between the Higgs Lagrangian and the dilaton, the solutions
are flux tubes that generate a non-asymptotically flat geometry. Any point in
parameter space corresponds to two branches of solutions with two different
asymptotic behaviors. Unlike the non-dilatonic case, where one branch is always
asymptotically conic, in the present case the asymptotic behavior changes
continuously along each branch.Comment: 15 pages, 6 figures. To be published in Phys. Rev.
Discrete time-series models when counts are unobservable
Count data in economics have traditionally been modeled by means of integer-valued autoregressive models. Consequently, the estimation of the parameters of these models and their asymptotic properties have been well documented in the literature. The models comprise a description of the survival of counts generally in terms of a binomial thinning process and an independent arrivals process usually specified in terms of a Poisson distribution. This paper extends the existing class of models to encompass situations in which counts are latent and all that is observed is the presence or absence of counts. This is a potentially important modification as many interesting economic phenomena may have a natural interpretation as a series of 'events' that are driven by an underlying count process which is unobserved. Arrivals of the latent counts are modeled either in terms of the Poisson distribution, where multiple counts may arrive in the sampling interval, or in terms of the Bernoulli distribution, where only one new arrival is allowed in the same sampling interval. The models with latent counts are then applied in two practical illustrations, namely, modeling volatility in financial markets as a function of unobservable 'news' and abnormal price spikes in electricity markets being driven by latent 'stress'.Integer-valued autoregression, Poisson distribution, Bernoulli distribution, latent factors, maximum likelihood estimation
PROGRAMMED EFFECTS OF SURFACE WATER PRICE LEVELS ON U.S. AGRICULTURAL WATER USE AND PRODUCTION PATTERNS
Resource /Energy Economics and Policy,
Alchemical and structural distribution based representation for improved QML
We introduce a representation of any atom in any chemical environment for the
generation of efficient quantum machine learning (QML) models of common
electronic ground-state properties. The representation is based on scaled
distribution functions explicitly accounting for elemental and structural
degrees of freedom. Resulting QML models afford very favorable learning curves
for properties of out-of-sample systems including organic molecules,
non-covalently bonded protein side-chains, (HO)-clusters, as well as
diverse crystals. The elemental components help to lower the learning curves,
and, through interpolation across the periodic table, even enable "alchemical
extrapolation" to covalent bonding between elements not part of training, as
evinced for single, double, and triple bonds among main-group elements
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